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Opinion_

Past shootings of US presidents led to new gun controls - will this one?

16 July 2024
Donald Trump assassination attempt - aftermath
David Smith, Associate Professor in American Politics and Foreign Policy in the Discipline of Government and International Relations, looks into the history of the AR-15 rifle and attempts at gun control in America.

The shooting of former president Donald Trump and three attendees at his rally was just one of nearlyin the US so far this year.

Amid all the shocking news from that day, there was one depressingly familiar detail. The shooter used an, the kind of semiautomatic weapon that has featured in dozens ofsince the.

Despite theit has brought, the AR-15 has a fierce grip on American politics. ճhas called the AR-15 “”, and in 2023.

The AR-15 enjoys aon the American Right, a defiant response to persistent efforts.

Since a Clinton-era assault weapons ban expired in 2004, the United States has never come close to reinstating federal curbs on semiautomatic rifles. Will this change now that an AR-15 almost claimed the life of Donald Trump, the former Republican president and current presidential nominee? It’s unlikely. But past shootings of American presidents have given rise to some of the most significant gun control reforms in the country’s history.

Assassinations and gun control in the 1960s

The murder of President John F. Kennedy in November 1963 began a painful discussion about the need to curtail the flow of cheap firearms in the United States. Lee Harvey Oswald had used a surplus Italian military rifle,, to shoot the president.

Within days of Kennedy’s death, Connecticut Senator Thomas Dodd was proposing legislation to ban mail order sales of rifles. His initial proposals never made it out of Senate committees, and.

But President Lyndon Johnson continued to press Congress on the issue, which eventually resulted in the. This introduced minimum ages for gun purchases, restricted interstate sales, and prohibited sales to felons,and “mentally incompetent” persons.

Tragically, it took two more shooting assassinations to get the legislation passed. The murder ofin April 1968, followed byas he campaigned for the presidency in June, provided the final push for congressional votes in favour of the legislation.

By this point, the Gun Control Act even had the partial support of NRA Executive Vice President Franklin Orth. He testified before a Congressional Committee in favour of banning mail order sales,:

We do not think any sane American, who calls himself an American, can object to placing in this bill the instrument that killed the president.

The attempt on Reagan and the Brady act

ճin 1981 is remembered today for theand theof his would-be killer. But it also led to the most enduring gun control reforms of the last 40 years.

Reagan’s press secretary James Brady was shot in the head and paralysed during the attack on Reagan. His wife Sarah Brady became a leading campaigner for gun control, and her organisation threw its weight behind thewhen it was first introduced to Congress in 1987.

This bill amended the 1968 Gun Control Act to mandate background checks and waiting periods for firearm purchases, both of which could have prevented the Reagan shooting. It failed in 1988 and again in 1991. This was largely due to the NRA, which had nowinto an absolutist opponent of gun control with considerable influence in Congress.

The Brady Act finallywith the support of the Clinton Administration in 1993. It has since been credited with reductions inԻ. Reagan, along with former presidents Jimmy Carter and Gerald Ford (who survivedhimself), also, which had almost unanimous support in the Senate butten years later.

Why renewed gun control is unlikely in wake of Trump shooting

Since the George W. Bush administration, Republicans have stood firm against almost any form of national gun control. The NRA has, especially over Democrats, but gun rights have become one of the signature battles of America’s culture wars.

It is anissue for Republicans, who have opposed eventhat large majorities of Americans. Trump, mindful of anything that could harm his chances of getting elected, has removed almost any mention of guns or the Second Amendment from this year’s Republican platform.

If anyone could actually weaken the Republican orthodoxy on guns, it would be Trump at this moment, given his colossal standing in the party. But if hisand currentare anything to go by, there is little chance of him ever supportingfor a renewal of the assault weapons ban.

Previous shootings of presidents have forced Americans to reconsider the role of guns in national life. But for Trump’s supporters, his survival may fit a pro-gun narrative.

ճthat “the only thing that stops a bad guy with a gun is a good guy with a gun” is not a call to end gun violence. It’s a call to embrace gun violence as natural, and to be on the winning side of it.

Americans have thankfully been spared the truly horrific images that would have ensued if a bullet had killed Trump. Instead, Trump has created anof survival and triumph, while his attacker was killed in seconds by the Secret Service. As traumatic as this event was for some of those who attended it, it has rapidly become afor many of Trump’s supporters.

For years,of thehave beenin terms of war. The attempted killing of Trump will have confirmed for many of them that their enemies are truly dangerous, but they are destined to win. Senator Marco Rubio tweeted within minutes of the assassination attempt that “God protected President Trump”.

Who needs gun control when you’ve got that?


Associate Professor David Smith, is Associate Professor in American Politics and Foreign Policy in the Discipline of Government and International Relations. He is a co-author of and a member of the US Studies Centre. This story was first published in .

Hero Image: Former US President Donald Trump is rushed off stage by secret service after being shot at during a campaign rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, USA, 13 July 2024. Image credit: David Maxwell/EPA/AAP

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